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tv   Fox News Reporting  FOX News  May 19, 2013 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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without losing traction or power the all-wheel-drive mower from husqvarna. challenge the impossible. visit us online to enter the challenge the impossible promotion >> fox weather alert. i am harris falkner. we knew it was coming. forecasters predicted it. would you look off to the left of your screen. tornadoes touching down in oklahoma, and iowa. this is the worth damage we have seen. shawnee, oklahoma at least one person dead in that area. we can tell you that the person who died in shawnee just outside of oklahoma city was confirmed during fox report but now we are learning more and seeing so much more with our own eyes. tornado warnings still in effect from minnesota to oklahoma. janice dean is in the fox extreme weather center with the latest.
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janice? >> i want to show you the radar without the watch so you can see where the parent storm is moving out of the rockies and ahead of it that's where we saw the storms really erupt out of nowhere ahead of the cold front. when you have these rouge storms that kinds of form ahead of the front that is the most dangerous type of super cell you can have. because it doesn't have the energy of the other storms around it and in back of it, if you will. as you see the worst hit right now the report we are getting out of kansas and oklahoma city, wichita as well as south and east of oklahoma city where the devastating pictures are coming in from shawnee, oklahoma. watches and warnings continue in the evening and the overnight from oklahoma, all of the way up to minnesota, we still have active tornado warnings in and around the shawnee area. there is shawnee right there. the cells are holding together even as we get into the evening hours. of course when the sun goes down it is going to be really hard to tell when the storms are moving
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into your neighborhood. up towards portions of kansas still tornado warnings there and into iowa. we had a tornado warning looks like we dropped that. active watches and warnings will continue into the overnight, harris. unfortunately into tomorrow as well. this region where you see in red we think all of those conditions have come together. four tornadoes it's going to continue. it is tomorrow. some of the same hard hit areas. into monday and then into tuesday again we are talking about 31 people in the path of some of these storms. the pictures tell the story. >> they do. >> we were predicting it but to see the devastation come to fruition is just heartbreaking. >> janice, real quiikly before you walk away. i know you have got a lot what you are watching there for us. we have a special fox report coming up in about an hour. 10:00 p.m. eastern. as we look at these pictures in shawnee, oklahoma some of these same areas are still in red on the map.
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>> yes. absolutely. we could still see the potential for very damaging storms in some of these same yareas into tomorrow. >> janice, we will check back. casey and i have been talking to each other via e-mail and twitter. he's on the road and also by phone. interstate 35 and casey what can you bring us now? >> harris, we have now arrived in oklahoma city. just as you heard jp saying we want to make our way over to shawnee. you can understand it is still a very dangerous situation over there because they are not out of the woods as she was saying with these storms. we are going to hang back a little bit and let those pass before we put ourselves in any part of danger before we try to bring our pick viewers pictures. incredible images of the local teams that have been here on the ground the local affiliates in and around the city area. a number of tornadoes we are hearing reports of at least more than 10 now that have actually
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struck in the state of oklahoma. mostly to the east, to the northeast and to the southeast of oklahoma city the national weather service has to of course confirm all of that for us. we have seen a number of communities that have been hit and a number of communities that have been damaged but it seems from some of the officials on the ground that shawnee, oklahoma which is about 40 miles southeast of where i am right now, appears to be the worst. in fact that is where we know that a mobile home park has been destroyed. i just got off the phone with dispatch there, harris, in shawnee, oklahoma who tell me there is still a search and rescue operation underway at that mobile home park very active and fluid and still very dangerous as severe weather continues to threaten that area, harris. >> all right. i missed a little bit of what you were saying a producer was talking with me. we are looking right now, casey, at shawnee, oklahoma that you
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are describing, that mobile home park. i know you are in a vehicle we are hear the wind whipping on your microphone. there's not a whole lot left, casey. your heart just breaks because even though peas peopthese peop the best of plans get out of this you can see the damage you can understand why the fatalities that we are report g reporting. first responders are at the center of the screen there they are showing up now. you have been on the ground for these they have daunting task to look for survivors. you don't want to sound grim here. you hope and pray that that number doesn't go up. the reality is that it could. if you are talking about an entire mobile home park entire neighborhoods that have been destroyed and the first responders are kind of going
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flew wil-- through there. i was covering these a couple days ago in gran bu-- granbury, texas. it rips up the homes you walk tlau the neighborhoods and it's nothing but piles and piles of rub el. they have to take canines through there and make sure no one is trapped underneath this roubl. they have to make sure no one is dead under this rubble. within the last hour that tornado hitting shawnee. they have this daunting task. you hope that number doesn't go up. when you see the pictures i have seen the media the news choppers flying over that area it doesn't look good, harris. >> i want to ask, too, casey, because we are goi different videos showing the debris that was flying around in areas, it doesn't look like it's
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quite dark yet. we are seeing that live picture, when we can, because the chopper has just gone away to reposition itself over shawnee, oklahoma. so when it gets back into position we will go back to the live picture you will see the first responders showing up and the skies seem to have cleared it's like a dusk. it looks beautiful outside. >> yeah, harris it's really weird. in oklahoma city it's cooler the wind is breezy but the skies are blue and the sun is starting to go down. but the birds are chirping. it is so bizarre when you come in right after these things hit, because they are on the ground for a short period of time they do an extreme amount of damage and they blow through. it is a bizarre feeling. it started this afternoon edmond oklahoma, north of oklahoma city, tornadoes doing damage in edmond. they continue to go to the east to arcadia, oklahoma, luther, oklahoma, an area called carnie,
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oklahoma. then we started seeing this super cell forming to the south of oklahoma city near norman which incidentally is where the national weather service has an office. i talked to them earlier i called them what's going on down there? they could see rotation forming out of their back door. that cell started in norman then started jogging over to the east. we understand doing a great deal of damage to the northwest side of lake thunderbird which is east of norman then it went into the area of pink, oklahoma. pink as in the color. and then the damage we are seeing out of shawnee. that shawnee damage was out of the second super cell that formed to the southeast of oklahoma city. oklahoma city to the most part seems to be fair. most of the damage these cells again to the north and east of oklahoma city and to the south and to the southeast of oklahoma city, but only time will tell, because as janice said, we saw
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this in texas last week, one area would have a tornado warning it would expire and then you thought you were out of the woods and 30 minutes later a new tornado warning was issued. if weather when you have the unstable air and extreme high temperatures we have been experiencing for this time of year and you have the cold front coming in with a lot of humidity in the air. >> it is very combat i. it is a perfect storm, no pun intended. >> we had in the last hour from the noah prediction center our guest was saying the same thing, they saw this coming. we were best prepared, but as you can see from the damage to the right of the screen and as you are hearing casey seigel who is now reaching these areas nature has a different plan and it's not following our emergency warning system. it does what it wants. look at that tree pulled out of the ground like -- oh my gosh. i was a storm chaser for eight
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years in kansas. i have seen a lot of this up close this is particularly heartbreaking. casey seigel thank you very much. before we return to regularly schedule the programming on fox news program the red cross needs your help. this is bad. now e in america we have big hearts. we are going to text red cross to 90999. we are going to text to 90999. we are going to do our part. i will see you for fox report special edition 10:00 p.m. eastern. get any more tempting... ... you thought wrong. get up to 50% off hotels this memorial day with travelocity.
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>> there's a line >> there's a line often attributed to thomas jefferson. it is the bull work of democracy. what happens when politicians know so much more about us than we know about them? mike hall le-- my colleague bear
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bowyer joins me right now. >> the obama campaign did know a lot about us and that may have helped him win a second term. >> thank you, america. god bless you. >> i wish i would have been able to fulfill your hopes to lead the country in a different direction but the nation choose different leader. >> election night 2012 came to a shock with terrible economy and high unemployment at home new dangers abroad president obama seemed so beatable. >> my heart and my whole soul was we are going to win. i was there. >> we were convinced we were going to win. the energy and passion was with the voters.
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we had poll that is showed we would win in places like iowa. >> romney didn't know what obama knew. >> they used the advantages of income ben see time and money to create something new with politics. >> sort of the perfect political corporation. >> sashaize ize enberg wrote the quote. >> make sure people know how to vote. >> bay harnessing your data and running experiments borrowed by behavioral psychology they made a virtual profile of every single persuadeable voter in the country targeted hthem with personalized messages and coaxed them to the polls. >> it was like pharmaceutical trials the voters were the guinea pigs. >> it was in this office building that was home to the labor giant the afl cio. inside is a secret amenity called the analysts institute.
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>> what is that? >> an corporation of little groups and campaigns and consultants to do science and help democrat win leblgs. >> he like ens it to a political manhattan project with the goal of developing political super weapons. it was first seen in a michigan governor's race six years ago. a couple researchers were testing a contest called identity sail yens. >> they assigned voters to get one of the election get out the vote. here.your history as a voter and here are your neighbor's voting and then there was a threat. >> a threat to tell your neighbors you didn't vote. >> this increase turned out among the people who received it by 20 percent. >> obama recognized it could help how voters thought and behaved. a psychologist helped him define mitt romney. even the conversation obama
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volunteered with voters were scripted. >> do you plan to vote on tuesday? what time do you plan to vote? what will you be doing before hand? where will you be coming from? we know from experiments having you make a plan visualize yourself doing this in advance makes you more likely to follow through on it. >> they had several people in the analyst institute to reelection headquarters in chicago. >> where was the case? >> where we put the analyst. >> carol davidson was director of media targeting. >> the hard-core analysts were in that room for multiple reasons it was our more top secret work. you don't want the press coming by to see what's on the screen. they didn't want them to know the group even existed. >> the president's tech team worked the algorithm to determine who the persuadeable voters were in the battle ground
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states. carol davidson figured out how to get the message to those specific voters. they developed the op tomorrow miser. it schroder what shows the persuadeables were watching and when. it was sold by some cable companies. >> we were able to get the data to our vendor and pair that data to et voer ill file data. >> people would find it creepy about so much bdata being out there about them and use it in a political campaign. >> at the end daft you get e-mails or mail you didn't know who the person sent it to you still know their name. you say hello peter. i am barack obama. it would freak you out. is it just different or is it really a concern about invading life. >> give me a program. >> like on judge judy and all over the place. >> did you have a way of testing
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whether or not the hospitoptimis working. >> f if you are defining succes we won the election. the only thing i can look at we got more impressions larger audience and paid less for it. >> at one point they were running shows on 60 different cable stations they were running them on 15 cable stations for romney. >> a consultant has been preaching about the political power of data. >> is one side doing better than the other? it was on a different planet. >> that is an extreme view. >> fox news contributor and former white house chief of staff who is also close to the romney campaign. >> the democrats have a big advantage on this both sides make crow target. the democrats took it to the next level. >> rouve says the differences i republicans face their analysis
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on a single snapshot. while the obama team constantly update their data. >> the brill yens was to say we need to dynamically do this. so we can exploit those openings. >> on leblgs night the romney camp had no idea what was hitting them. i wonder if that was behind the evening's most talked about television office. >> one of the biggest blocks of votes on the state as republican suburbs inside hamilton county. rouge was talking abo-- rove wa talking about the romney campaign. they still believed their man could win. >> they believed it. >> as a matter of fact at the end of the night you are absolutely right hamilton county gets carried narrowly. >> rove insists republicans can win and will win the political arms race that will insight gop partisans who just won a
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victory. about will it new way give us better manipulators rather than better leaders. >> what happened to old style political gut and leadership where you are trying to sell an idea to people and convince voters this idea is worth voting for. >> if you rely on a data you make no room to leadership. responsibility to leadership is not simply to follow but to mold public opinion in the right direction. >> daylight taw is power. what would you feel about those big enough to collect and store phone call, e-mail surveillance video and internet search from around the world? tylenol works by blocking pain signals to your brain bayer back & body's dual action formula includes aspirin, which blocks pain at the site. try the power of bayer back & body. but first you've got to get him to say, "hello."
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>> the 4th mainedment to the constitution dra >> the fourth amendment declared among other things that a person's paper would not be subject to unreasonable searchs. the founder felt we should be
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able to keep our letters our diaries or writings privat 140 years later henry smith shut down the agency that de coded foreign communications. stimpson declared gentlemen don't read each other's mail. much has changed. they posed threats we can't ignore. >> pearl harbor taught that's correct what they didn't know could hurt very much. there was a need to be up on enemy intelligence. >> this form of trech reshall never again endanger us. >> after world war ii came the cold war p and the threat of global communism. it sparked a fierce debate at the highest levels regarding
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citizen's rights verses national security. over that debate ultimately came the national security agency or nsa. they showed secrets the joke was there was no such agency. >> what did the president know and when did he know it? >> after watergate, however, people wanted to know what the spy agencies were really up to. in 1975 general lewallen became the first director to testify publically before congress. the agency what is so seek tcre was exposed. the nsa headquartered in maryland was eavesdropping on messages sent into and out of the country. in response in 1979 the federal government agency passed the foreign intelligence surveillance act. it required special fisa
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warrants. the nsa adopted and moved on. with the fall of the soviet union the missions team less urgent and the nsa lagged behind in the latest technology. as the nsa director who took charge in 99 put it in the age of tell communication breakthroughs the nsa was becoming deaf. but 9-11 had a shock that made everyone hear. they got a bigger budget and mission stop the next attack which led to a massive data center in the utah success ert the capacity to collect and analyze data so enormous had had former nsa staffers worried. >> it is a turnkey situation where it can become a
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call or cck to learn more. [ male announcer ] if you n't afrd your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. >> this is a fox weather alert. i am harris falkner. devastating tornadoes touching down in oklahoma, kansas and iowa. the worst of it seems to be in shawnee, oklahoma which is on the split side of the screen here. we can tell you at least one
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person reports one person is dead in shawnee just outside oklahoma city. tornado warnings are still in effect from minnesota to oklahoma. this is a busy day we wish it would end because the day has been busy on into the evening. janice dean you predicted this. we were hoping against all odds it wouldn't happen. >> the pictures are heartbreaking. it shows you the devastation mother nature can bring. you can warn people at the top of your lungs but when this type of damage occurs you hope people were seeking shelter. in if some cases they didn't seek shelter and some cases they were not able to. >> if you could go to weather 8 we will show you tornado watches in effect from oklahoma up toward the upper midwest, toward
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minnesota. weather 8 will show you what we are talking about the watches and warnings. i want to show you how the storms bubbled up ahead of this cold front. we had rouge cells that erupted ahead of this cold front that provide so much damage. the one good thing here is we have only one warning right now oklahoma or rather kansas right here east of toronto. >> live fox report top of the hour. care >> that would be 19 inches high. one would be more than 162,000 iphones which would reach higher than the empire state building.
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it would be more than 62 million iphones reaching higher than the international space station. one data bite would be more than 62 million iphones stacked they would reach past the moon. if it really has 5 data bites it could store every e-mail, cell phone call, google search and surveillance camera video in america for a very long time. >> what are they going to do at the data center? >> i kwdon't know. it's classified. >> you have seen the reports e-mails phone records, banking records all of that. >> i have been on the tour i have seen the facilities they give me a general over view. >> all they would tell us is the utah data center is a facility that would have a major focus on cyber security. >> we haven't given access but we could see it from the sky.
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>> i like to be real close. this is as close as you are going to get without a security clear rens. >> these cranes after 12:00. raises questions about the amount of data that could be kept in one place from many different sources. >> the senior official from the nsa from 2001 to 2008. >> where does this data come from? are we talking about e-mail traffic or fays book postings or telephone calls travel itineraries? >> i don't know precisely. it suggests about any of that and more. >> they should be concerned about letting the government go too far in the name of security. >> only way united perfe-- you
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security is have a perfect security team. >> he is not alone feeling that way. whatever you did electronically. >> they have been there for four decades starting with a data analyst in the days before procedures. they began a surveillance program approved president bush. >> it started with the telecoms providing billing data, records of people in the united states calling people in the united states. my estimate was they were collected in the order of 3 billion a day. >> that is just internal. >> benny thought it was wrong. quit in protest. meet the streer of the nsa surveillance program in the new york times. in 2007 the nsa officially
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discontinued that program. the same year suspecting he was a source for the new york times leak the fbi rated bill's home. >> my son answered the door they pushed him back at gun point. they came up stairs i was in the shower. one guy came in and pointed the gun at my head and said come on out. >> an fbi agent points a gun at your head. you are naked in the shower? >> i had a towel. >> benny denies being a leaker. he was not charged with any crime but a fellow whistleblower but remember tom drake his house was searched, two, he was charged with 5 counts of espionage. he bleedpleaded guilty of misus computer. >> i talked with a reporter but did not share what was talked about in any way, shape or form. >> i believe but it was lawful and it was appropriate.
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>> from 99 to 2005 general michael hayden was drake and benny's boss. >> they may have a different view, god bless them. this is america. i think it made america safe during a period of great danger. >> he says benny and drake were simply wrong uninformed when he said the program was illegal. in con gri congress legalized w was going on. president obama who recently reauthorized the law agreed. that makes drake as worried as ever. he believes president obama used that tower ev-- power more aggressively than the man accused of sledding the co-- shg the competition. >> their action is low we should have never gotten away with even half of what the obama administration is doing. t
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>> far less apparent than the bush administration? >> yes. >> that's another reason why benny and drake have been opponents of this. >> what could they do with it what are the controls what does the over sight mean? >> one man they hoped would do it is the national security agency general alexander. when he applied request to sit down with the interview we sat down with a washington think tank where he was speaking at a security event. >> do you hold data on u.s. citizens? >> we don't hold data on u.s. citizens. they take protecting your civil liberties and privacy as the most important thing they do in securing this nation. when people just throw out oh they are going to have all of this stuff at the data center that is bologna.
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it would give adversaries a tremendous advantage. we are not going to do that. >> benny said the protests missed the point. it is not about the character of the former nsa colleagues it's about the possibility the government's stunning new capacity to collect store and analyze data will test less than norm leaders if not now than in the future. >> it's really a turnkey situation where you can turn quickly and become a totalitarian state pretty quickly. the capacity to do that is being set up. if you have the wrong person in office or government they could make that happen quickly. life liberty and the pursuit of happiness we balance those three virtues all of the time. the question people like me ask how much more do you want me to do? >> what can the government computer know and how can it
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>> ruthless people, risky busines >> ruthless people, risky business, the man who knew too much. these are all videos recently deceased judge once rented. how do we know? when bourque was nominated to the supreme court his rental history was leaked to the press. this privacy violation so helped people congress made it a federal rental record. numerous web sites doesn't really know what you have watched but what you wanted to watch next. knows people assume the nsa
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cannot as they watch. >> we are teach ago computer how to go through and look at large patterns and understand what they mean. >> gary angle is head of sim phonemics a company he founded over 15 years ago. that makes it one of the most experienced players in the data game. >> it has information on things like twitter. >> a big part of what they do is scan the web and analyze data. it is not unlike what the nsa will try to do at the sue taw data center. isolate the fragments of data and connect the dots before the threat materializes. >> what do you think would surprise people most about data mining? what don't they know?
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>> how much work goes into getting the inclusion of the data. they can do far more than they actually can. >> the biggest challenge isn't collecting and storing the information it's making sense of it all. >> this is a selection of terms that national security might be interested in. seems like radioactive or bridges or stations or airports. here is the tricky part. if you miss stuff we don't know it. mourned if you turn up lots and lots of things none of them are people lose confidence. >> people look at the aeld cry wolf situation, right? >> even big brother faces road blocks. the data center will likely have the ability to do it. >> that being said people go through the e-mail.
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it is impossible. the computer throws out it is interesting or important. >> you think people have said in the post 9-11 age they are going to trust the government to do what is right than additional data? >> would any ch of us -- along h it being better we have to introduce a whole set of risks. >> growing up in an age where all of the stupid things you can do can live forever on the internet. by clinging to the past. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand of us investing billions... in everything from the best experiences below... to the finest comforts above. we're not simply saluting history... we're making it.
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>> in the late 1800's future supreme court e -- supreme court justice worried about snap shop photography. if newspapers can snap and shoot
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any one's pictures what would happen to our privacy. the right we value most is the right to be left alone. that's still proof why are so many people putting so much out there on-line? >> what do you think before you put a picture up on-line? >> in southampton massachusetts. >> can't be inappropriate because you get a reputation for that. >> kevin is teaching his 6th greyed class how not -- 6th grade class how not to ruin their phones with their iphones or whatever gets them on-line. >> i was noticing my students talking about their lives on facebook and it was clear they weren't sure nhow to navigate that. >> you need to put this up there. it's my 11-year-old they are
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fearless with technology. they speak about the ramifications later. >> we are talking about them developing a digital personality right now when they will impact going to jobs in the future and colleges. it will follow you. >> stacy's son anthony is in kevin's class. she also has a 10th grade daughter francesca. both have i tops and i pads. >> what are your concerns about that? >> i want them to go to college some day i want them to not have the admissions office to come and say whoa this is what's happening when you were in high school or 7th grade. >> it wouldn't be surprising if om kids thought their parents worried so much. think about the rich famous people who got that way thanks to many a parent's worst
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nightmare. kim kardashian's sex tape was up loaded on the internet. soon she was an internet star. paris hilton was a new york socialite hoping for a reality show hit. her sex tape on the internet helped make that happen. and charlie sheen's career was teetering on the brink. he began tweeting out all sorts of embarrassing mess sacages an posting videos in an earlier day would have finished him. >> they would rather have the fame and celebrity rather than what i would call a sense of self-respect. >> the wall street journal editorial page calls it years of indiscretion. >> do you keep that in the back of your mind that your son or daughter may do something outrageous just to get known? >> i haven't thought it with my
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kids but now that you told me i am thinking oh my goodness. >> it is scary for me to think that withay. >> martin's fear captures the great paradoxes of the digital age. half a century ago novelist george othrwell managed a socie which there was an allí8@rwell brother. today big data has far more ability than even orwell imaged to see, record, analyze everything we do. to even know much of what we think. but one thing would surely surprise orwell. instead of citizzns demanding their privacy they can't gwait o give it away. >> if the root end is behaving like a moron a lot of people are willing to give up their privacy, give up their sense of shame, give up their embarrassment. >> the problem is there's not enough fame or fortune for everyone with a digital camera
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and a broadband connection. the capacity to screw up your life does seem lime mittless. >> dominos pizza employee fired and criminally charged after posting a video of themselves doing gross things to food they were repairing: >> a high school math teacher put on leave after putting on pictures of herself topless and allegedly smoking pot. >> today i am announcing my resignation from congress. >> who can forget married new york congressman anthony weiner forced to resign in disgrace after a tweeted picture of his privates went viral. >> there was a point in the past if you were about to do something like that there woulden a voice in the back of your head saying, i don't think you should do this. >> how many of you have an iphone or an android or a galaxy or ipad? put up your hand.
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which brings us back to the massachusetts classroom. with all of the mixed messages out there, which choices will these kids make? >> as a parent what do you do? you trust? you have blind faith? >> yes. i hate to admit it, but yes. and try to keep the conversation open. >> two generations ago gordon moore the founder of intel predicted computers would double their capacity about every two years. this proved so accurate it has become known as mooers law. modern data collected has expanded with breath taking velocity. the question is whether our social political legal solutions can keep up to ensure big data doesn't turn into big brother. ultimately it is only as aware informed citizens in other words by carefully watching for ourselves what's going on around us that we will get and keep the country we want, one that is
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efficient, one is that safe, but also one that doesn't always have us looking over our shoulders. that's our show. thanks for watching. get any more tempting... ... you thought wrong. get up to 50% off hotels this memorial day with travelocity.
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